Part Seven– “Through The Cross To The New Creation, The Church In Action”

We continue with Part Seven, the finale of, “Through The Cross To The New Creation, The Church In Action”, written by May Tripp, founder of Animal Christian Concern, or ACC. If you have not read the previous posts you can find them here: Parts One, Two, Three, Four, Five, Six. This article is included in the book, “Animal Welfare: Through The Cross, A Collection Of Animal Christian Concern Articles” by Roslyne Smith, and can be purchased here.For those who would like to read the entire article: THROUGH-THE-CROSS Article 10

I have tried in this talk to show how we, as Christians, share in the strivings and sufferings of secular animal welfarists, the sufferings of the Cross. Especially I want to say how we in our work are dependent not upon our own strengths – which are frail – but upon God, by the strength of His Holy Spirit. This strength we always have, however imperfect we are. As St. Paul said to the Corinthians, “There is nothing in us that allows us to claim that we are capable of doing this work. The capacity we have comes from God; it is He who made us capable of serving the new covenant, which consists not of a written law but of the Spirit”. (2 Corinthians 3 v 4-6).

I have spoken of transformations, of promptings from God and these are blessings to be treasured. The most significant one for me was in 1987, two years after ACC had been formed. It was one Christmas, on “Boxing” night, when jaded from commercialism and even from the glitter of church services, I fell asleep pondering on the true meaning of Christmas. It seemed that I was immediately given a picture of a task. Before me lay the body of the crucified Christ Jesus, traditionally naked except for a loincloth, His face turned away from me, and I knew that I had to place His body back upon the Cross. In the background a non-Christian ceremony was taking place and I felt an increased urgency for my task; a sort of conflict was present. I looked for the Cross, but before me was not a cross but a thorn hedge, and the thorns were not thorns but metal spikes and rods. I thought that I should never be able to lift the body of Christ but I tried, and from behind me came a shadowy figure whom I never saw and who helped me to lift Him. I scrambled up the hedge, holding Christ, who was dead but warm and vibrant. In the strange way that happens in dreams my practical consciousness was thinking: “I could be hurt on these spikes and I don’t want that.” I hastily fastened Christ on to one of them and climbed down quickly. I awoke briefly, overawed and still feeling the blessing and warmth of Christ. The picture changed and I stood looking through a latticed window preparing, with much pride, to show a very dear friend the body of Christ which I had placed on His Cross. We looked. The hedge was empty. I awoke with a shock, betrayed, thinking that my task had all been a dreadful mistake. Not until later did I realise that my heart had needed to “crucify” the Lord of Creation and then allow Him to rise. And that the wood which makes the manger is of the same wood which makes the Cross. So, too, I learned that in pro­claiming Christ crucified it simply is not possible to avoid the pain of the thorns.

I make no extravagant claim for this dream, which may well have been the result of my own ponderings. But the singular thing about it was that, almost imperceptibly, it had changed me. Gone were my previous multi-faith ideas, my reluctance to accept the need of the Cross, my uncertainties. When reading the Bible I began to recognise the ONLY Son of God, Christ Jesus crucified, risen, ascended and awaited. Gone too was any timidity about our cause for animals. My convictions were strengthened and I saw with a new clarity how God’s love for His whole creation had been there from the very beginning, as had been our responsibilities of caring for His creatures. I recognised that His natural creation now awaits His coming and the fulfilment of Redemption, just as we do.

Sadly, I also saw that most of His Church is not proclaiming this, and that its failure to do so is undermining not only our work on behalf of animals but the very fabric of our Christian faith. It is the whole Truth of the Gospel which is increasingly under threat.

So I end by calling upon the Church to preach the WHOLE Gospel to the WHOLE creation. Only thus will we Christians fully honour our Lord and fully accept our responsibilities for all of His creatures. Then, as in the old Christmas carol, we shall know the way of the CROSS to the NEW CREATION.

“Trace we the Babe who hath retrieved our loss,From the poor manger to the bitter Cross;Tread in His steps, assisted by His grace,Till man’s (creation’s) first heavenly state again takes place.”“Christians Awake, Salute The Happy Morn.”

With love and prayers,
May Trip

Thank you for reading and following our blog. We pray you are blessed by these articles, and will share them with others. God’s love and blessing! ~Kathy

My calling as a Child of the Creator is to take the Gospel, as it relates to the WHOLE creation, to the world; and to remind the Church of its Biblical responsibilities to animals.View all posts by Kathy →

Hi Janeen, all questions welcome! We feel our special calling is to that of the issue of animal welfare and the voice of the church, or need thereof. And yes, we believe our blog is a ministry for all creation. There are many posts geared toward the teaching of scripture for people, all of our posts are scripturally based. Generally, we do bring animals into the fold at the same time because we believe the Gospel message was to be shared on behalf of the WHOLE creation.
Thanks for your question! I hope this answered it. If not do feel free to let me know. Many blessings to you and yours, Janeen!
In Christ,
Kathy

I’ve been thinking of this for my vegan self also. God doesn’t command us to minister to the animals as obviously as he says help people, as in Matt 25 separating the sheep and goats.
And church is okay, but where is the real needs, Africa, the homeless.
I am feeling led to answer what seems to be a more important cry, and let God and of course individuals care gently and life giving to the animals.
Just what’s on my heart

An after thought to the earlier message Janeen; I thought I’d share one of the posts that ministers to people especially: https://shepherdingcreation.com/2016/10/09/give-me-jesus/. Our audience is largely animal welfarists, so when we do minister to people, usually what we write is a biblical support specific to that audience.

Hi Janeen, thank you for another comment, and sharing your particular feeling or calling or cross. We would always encourage others to follow the dictates of the Holy Spirit, in whatever way He leads. ALL creation is important, our perspective here is not that one is more important than the other, but that God’s love is indivisible; he needs the whole church to be his arms and feet and hands in ALL areas where evil reigns on the earth. The homeless and the needs in Africa are important, just as important as is the calling to minister to others in bringing animals in from the fringes and making them a part of the Gospel message, for indeed the Bible does teach that we are to share the Gospel to the whole creation (Mark 16:15; Luke 14:23; Matt 28:19,20; Act 1:7,8 – https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mark+16%3A15%2CLuke+14%3A23%2CMatthew+28%3A19-20%2CActs+1%3A7-8%2CMark+16%3A15-16&version=NKJV).
Many Blessings!
Kathy

I thought of something else too, Janeen, Jessica Lopez, one of our partners, has a huge heart for the homeless! She would be a good person to talk to, if you are looking to perhaps plug in somewhere in this area of ministry. I have experience with homelessness as well, and can talk about it and perhaps ways to minister, if you are interested. Blessings, Kathy